How can I fill out a Section 8 application online?

There's really no trick to find a Section 8 application online or at your local housing authority. An application
can only be obtained and completed when applications are being accepted. The process can be leangthy indeed as
some applicants can be on a Section 8 waiting list for several years.

How long is the waiting list for Section 8?

The length of each Section 8 waiting list will vary for each housing authority in the country. Understand that one
can be on several different waiting lists at once. It will increase an applicants over all chances of being contacted
after completing a Section 8 application online.

Find information about open waiting lists around the country for the following states with your Onlien Packet:

How can I fill out a Section 8 application online?

The Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher Program is a rental assistance program that is subsidized by HUD. Housing authorities run the Section 8 and Public Housing Programs locally. Each city may have
several housing authorities. A Section 8 housing application is difficult to find because most PHA's have to keep their waiting lists closed because of the high demand for housing.
When a Section 8 application is being accepted, however, they are always free at your local housing athority. The Section 8 and Subsidized Housing Online Packet helps it's members find open Section 8 waiting lists online and
also includes the Housing List Blog.

The vehicle from which this program was launched is called the Section 8 and Subsidized Housing Online Packet
because we have combined, or "consolidated" so many low income resources and search tools into our Online Packet. The Online Packet is sold for a one time fee of 15 dollars and is updated with
new listings and information daily. Members
are able to take advantage of this from now on at no additional cost.

Why does your website state that it provides, "low income grants and affordable housing opportunities" and yet you have indicated that you do not provide housing personally?

As stated in the link below from our site and news release, these opportunities come in the form of listings in our Online Packet.
The operative word being, "opportunities". We have a Housing List Blog where landlords upload their listings with photos.
Tenants also leave their contact information. This is a useful tool that helps landlords to find tenants and vice versa.
Please read the first paragraph on our homepage. This information is reiterated throughout Section8programs.com. We also make it clear that an section 8 housing application is free when they are being accepted. We have simply invented an online resource that helps one to find these open waiting list throughout the country.

What your rights are once you are in the Section 8 program
If you get into public housing or multifamily subsidized housing, or if you get a voucher after filling out a section 8 application, you have different rights concerning evictions, grievances, tenant participation, and many other issues. To get information about your rights once you are in a program, go to: Public Housing.
Your family size changes
In all housing programs, you should promptly report if there are changes in your family size. If someone has left your household, the housing authority or owner may request verification of their new address. If a minor child is added to the household due to birth, adoption, or court-awarded custody, advance approval of the addition is not needed before the child moves in. In all other cases, you will need to get advance approval before a new family member moves in. In addition, the housing authority or owner may screen additions to the household for criminal history and (in most of the federal programs) for immigration status.
In public housing or multifamily housing, if your family size changes, you may be able to transfer to another public housing or subsidized apartment of a more appropriate size. These transfers often take a long time to happen. These things will be asked on your section 8 application when you apply. In state low income housing, if you are in too large an apartment for your family size (you are "over-housed") and you don't transfer into a smaller sized unit offered by the housing authority, your rent can be increased to 150% of its usual level.
With a voucher, if your family size changes, the subsidy with the voucher changes by the date that your annual recertification for your income and family composition is effective. This is so that you can find an apartment that is a better match to your household size. This means, however, that in addition to adjusting with an increase in family size, if there is a reduction in your household size, the subsidy is reduced at the time of your annual recertification, so you would have to pay a greater portion of your rent or move. You can ask the housing agency to let you have a different "subsidy standard" (bedroom size for the subsidy) than it would normally apply due to your family's medical needs or other special circumstances.
Evictions and loss of subsidy
The only reason you can be evicted from public housing or any multifamily housing is if you violate the lease or program rules. As long as you abide by the terms of the lease, you can stay in your apartment. If you are evicted from low income housing or subsidized multifamily housing, you lose your subsidy.

When a Section 8 landlord terminates a lease, or refuses to renew subsidy, the housing agency should continue to pay its portion of the rent until the eviction process is completed (including any appeal of an eviction case or any stay of execution) or until you move. There may be cases, however, where the housing agency stops paying its subsidy or terminates its contract with the owner because the owner has failed to make repairs.
Finding a new tenant may take time as some can be on a waiting list for years after completing a Section 8 application you are not responsible for the housing authority's share of the rent if this happens. However, the housing agency may require you to relocate with your voucher in order to continue receiving assistance.
If you are being evicted for a reason that is your fault, the HUD housing authority may refuse to issue you a voucher to relocate if it thinks there are grounds to terminate your assistance. This may happen because the landlord is claiming that you violated your lease. If this happens, contact a local legal services program or community action agency to see if they can help you.